-
In the past week, Bank of Montreal announced and completed several fixed income offerings totaling over US$27 million, including both senior and junior unsecured notes with maturities ranging from 2028 to 2037, and launched five new Canadian depositary receipts trading on the Cboe Canada exchange.
-
This surge in debt issuances and expansion into new CDR products signals active capital raising and a broadened securities offering for investors.
-
We’ll consider how Bank of Montreal’s acceleration in fixed income and depositary receipt offerings may influence its investment thesis.
AI is about to change healthcare. These 30 stocks are working on everything from early diagnostics to drug discovery. The best part – they are all under $10b in market cap – there’s still time to get in early.
To be a Bank of Montreal shareholder, one generally needs to believe in the stability and growth potential of North American financial services, supported by strong net interest income and a diversified product lineup. The recent flurry of fixed income offerings and new Canadian depositary receipts extends BMO’s capital base and product suite, but does not appear to materially shift the primary short-term catalyst: expansion of loan and deposit balances, particularly in U.S. markets. The main risk, exposure to Canadian consumer and commercial credit, remains the one to watch.
Among recent announcements, the launch and completion of multiple senior and junior unsecured note offerings in late November stand out as especially relevant. These fixed income issuances help reinforce BMO’s funding sources and may provide increased flexibility in managing capital as it continues to grow its retail and commercial loan portfolios, a key driver if demand remains resilient.
In contrast, investors should be aware that rising costs related to technology and staffing could pressure margins if loan growth underperforms in coming quarters and…
Read the full narrative on Bank of Montreal (it’s free!)
Bank of Montreal’s narrative projects CA$38.3 billion revenue and CA$9.8 billion earnings by 2028. This requires 6.7% yearly revenue growth and a CA$1.5 billion earnings increase from CA$8.3 billion today.
Uncover how Bank of Montreal’s forecasts yield a CA$175.93 fair value, in line with its current price.
Five individual perspectives from the Simply Wall St Community show fair value estimates for Bank of Montreal ranging from CA$120 to CA$241.57 per share. This diversity of opinion comes as the bank continues to invest in digital platforms and AI-powered products, opening the way for multiple interpretations of its future performance.
